110 & -< " ,: :.\ ;. \. '. ;t r J ' ^ ,;. - -.....- - ",. ' ': .. ... : '% 1P <s<> ^,Q- ^ 1! '" ^* <. -';;'- _ .$'. .:;......:. ""'"." 4.. ^- From the master artisans of Japan Crystal Radiant crystal. Combining the grace and simplicity that mark the hand of the Japanese master with a flair for the dramatic. The result. . . PASCO takes pleasure in presenting this elegant crys- talware from Japan's greatest name in crystal- HOY A CANDLEWOOD DGoblet $4.95 each D Wme $4.50 each D Champagne $4.95 each 8 PAUL A. STRAUB CO., INC. 19 EAST 26TH STREET NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10010 ever heard of a fine restaurant without a kitchen? more chefs than waitresses? and a Japanese maitre d' named Rocky? -1 ""';j ---" BEDIHADA of TDHYD ' EAST 120 E. 56th St. WEST 61 W. 56th St in New York City Reservations: L T 1-0930 when it ended. You're not suppo ed to be glad, if you're a hero, but we were glad. I had decided then that this country was for me. I decIded that for me, as a Jew, Israel was home. I t seemed to me to be quite inci- dental where 1 or anybody else came from. I had come across a saying of the rabbis to the effect that a man is made up of soil, and the soil that makes him is part of the whole earth-that we each have In us more or les(;) the soil of ever} place It seems to me that all Jews have some part of the soil of Israel in them and have just been wandering around in other places for a long while. This is what I believe, anyway." He returned to St John's for a second year, and then had a year at Yeshiva University, where he studied Hebrew and Jewish history, because "there were things I felt 1 had to know." At this time, too, he decided to equip himself to be a surveyor, In order to start a new life in a new country, and he did so, going to night school and attending a summer field course run by C.C.N.Y., this set of skills was directly responsible for his later success as an entrepreneur in Israel. He told me about his becoming an Israeli. "1 gave up my citizenship," he said. "I renounced it in 1952, right after I came hack here. I walked up and down for fifteen min- utes in front of the consulate in Haifa before I finally decided to walk In and take the step There was a lot to think about. After all, It was a change, a real . change I was still very much an American. I had heen born and brought up in America; my parents were there. I suppose it is something like deciding to get married. You hesitate and think twice: Maybe I oughtn't to do this. And this is what I was doing that day in Haifa when I walked up and down in front of the consulate. But I now be- lieved there was a place for me to be. And if this was a privilege and a com- mand, if this was fulfilling a divine and a personal destiny, joining myself to all my forefathers, then, hy God, I thought, I really had to go for it all the way and become a citizen. If you're going to belong here, I said to myself, then you want to be in the Army, you want to be part of everything that's going on. If you had come to America, you would become an American citi- zen-that's what all the immigrants did when they came there. I went in. You know, I knew evangelists, from my days in the MarInes; we used to go to missions to get fed when our money ga ve out on leaves, and we used to sit and listen to them talk, hear them call the people back to Christ, talk about the great transformation that came over you when you finally came to that Inoment of accepting Christ. I thought of that when I walked out of that con- sulate that day. I felt transformed. I felt exhilarated by the step I had taken. I have no regrets." -HAROLD R. ISAACS (This is the second part of a two-part article.) . COUNTR. Y COUPLé They return in my thoughts wIth something woody in their kind Gestures and faces, almost as selni- Trees of unequal height but like shape, Both knurled and sparse and knobby F rom growing in a thin soil, a brusque clÎ1nate; One pinkish, the other silver-gray-skinned. Around theln were dlw dYS gardens, all kinds of gardens On the north juniper, on the south grapevines; Crimson roses, orange zinnias, apple trees Full of green apples; a bIg stone-walled square plot Bristling wIth pole beans and sweet corn. Their house grew too, unfurled lIke a pumpkin VIne Over the rocky ledge where it had found a hold Two hundred weathered years before them. \Vhen they became too old, it outgrew them, And they Illoved to three little rooms in town. But they stilJ had a garden, a small Weeping willow that, as Wé drank iced teet one endless afternoon Pored over us, traipsed its strands of weed Slowly across our faces, spelled us Captive where we sat in reclining chairs. -FRANCIS RICHARDSON